Zheng Fengrong’s granddaughter, Zheng Nina Li, became a naturalized Chinese citizen and has yet to meet the qualification criteria for the East Olympic Games.

Canadian track and field women’s heptathlete Nina Schultz, who has become the first naturalized foreigner in Chinese track and field, recently scored a career-best 6,153 points at the China National Games track and field trials, but is still 267 points short of the 6,420 points needed to meet the Tokyo Olympic standard this summer. The deadline for the East Olympics women’s 7-event all-around is June 29, and she must obtain her qualifying score within two months. 

According to the Free Times, Nina Cheng, formerly a Canadian track and field women’s heptathlon athlete, is preparing to represent China in the Tokyo Olympics, becoming the first naturalized foreigner in Chinese track and field, and she recently paid out a career best 6153 points in the National Games track and field test, but is still 267 points short of the 6420 points needed to reach the Tokyo Olympics this summer.

The 22-year-old Nina Li Zheng’s individual results were 13:37 for the 100m hurdles, 1m 82 for the high jump, 13m 32 for the shot put, 24:89 for the 200m, 6m 20 for the long jump, 43m 72 for the javelin, and 2:22:91 for the 800m, which ranked her first in seven events over the past two days, and her total score also broke her own personal best of 6133 points created in the 2018 Great Britain Association Games. As the deadline for the East Olympic women’s heptathlon is June 29, she must perform at the next level in these two months. 

According to the report, Zheng Nina Li was born in the Vancouver district of New Westminster, her father Canadian, mother Chinese immigrants, grandmother is the Chinese high jumper Zheng Fengrong, originally for Canada to compete, after switching her nationality on April 12 this year has been able to represent China to compete in international competitions, once triggered a heated debate from all walks of life, Canada’s former diplomat in China Charles Burton (Burton) has said bluntly, in such a sensitive period Charles Burton, a former Canadian diplomat in China, said bluntly that the decision to switch citizenship at such a sensitive time was “troubling.”